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Psychoanalytic Theory

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Being obsessed with something may make you project your guilt onto it. ... Socially-valued work and disciples are also expressions of generativity. EPIGENETIC THEORY ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychoanalytic Theory


1
Psychoanalytic Theory
  • Psychodynamic Theory
  • Collective Unconscious
  • Epigenetic Theory

2
Psychodynamic Theory
  • Psychodynamic Perspective
  • Creator Sigmund Freud
  • Defined Much of behavior is motivated by inner
    forces, memories, and conflicts of which a person
    has little awareness or control.
  • Major Principles
  • Unconscious forces act to determine personality
    and behavior.
  • The unconscious is part of everyones
    personality.
  • We are unaware of it though it strongly
    influences our behavior.

3
Psychodynamic Theory
  • Foundations of the Theory
  • Psychological Determinism Behaviors do not
    happen by chance
  • There are no accidents
  • Everything happens for a reason
  • Everything is determined by preceding events
  • Psychodynamic theorists take the stance of ultra
    determinism.
  • There is almost never the cause there is
    usually multiple causes.
  • Once we find a less threatening and simple
    explanation we stop, this is the wrong way.
  • Consciousness is Atypical Most of behavior and
    experience is occurring below the conscious level.

4
Psychodynamic Theory
  • ID Raw, unorganized, inborn part of personality
  • Pleasure Principle Continue producing behavior
    that gives positive stimulus and stop behavior
    that produces a negative stimulus and/or avoid
    negative stimuli
  • Primitive desires of hunger, sex, and aggression.
  • Satisfaction is ultimate goal

5
Psychodynamic Theory
  • Ego Rational and reasonable
  • Reality Principle Instinctual energy (ID) is
    restrained in order to maintain the safety of the
    individual and keep him/her within societies
    norms
  • Superego Sense of right and wrong
  • Conscience
  • Develops at age 5 or 6
  • Learned from others

6
Psychodynamic Theory
  • According to Freud development consists of
    stages
  • Pleasure and gratification are focused on
    particular biological functions.
  • If children are unable to gratify themselves
    sufficiently during a particular stage or receive
    too much of it, fixation will occur.

7
Psychodynamic TheoryStages of Development
8
Psychodynamic TheoryDefense Mechanisms
  • People may feel anxious or threatened when the
    wishes of the id conflict with social rules.
  • Ego has weapons at its command to relieve the
    tension.
  • Defense Mechanism Used by the ego to prevent
    unconscious anxiety or threatening thoughts from
    entering consciousness.

9
Psychodynamic TheoryDefense Mechanisms
  • Repression When the threatening idea, memory, or
    emotion is blocked from consciousness.
  • Something bad happens in childhood and you cant
    remember it anymore.
  • Projection A Persons own unacceptable or
    threatening feelings are repressed and then
    attributed to someone else.
  • Being obsessed with something may make you
    project your guilt onto it.
  • Displacement When people direct their emotions
    toward things, animals, or other people that are
    not the real object of their feelings.
  • You cant express your anger toward a caregiver
    thus you take it out on other kids.

10
Psychodynamic TheoryDefense Mechanisms
  • Reaction Formation When a feeling that produces
    unconscious anxiety is transformed into its
    opposite in consciousness.
  • Someone that is scared to death of their spouse
    may intern believe that they are madly in love
    with them.
  • Denial When people refuse to admit that
    something unpleasant is happening.
  • Protects a persons self-image
  • Preserves the illusion of invulnerability
  • It cant happen to me

11
Collective Unconscious
  • Creator Carl Jung
  • Modified Freuds Original Theory
  • In addition to the individuals own unconscious
    we have
  • Collective Unconscious-Contains universal
    memories, symbols, images, and themes
  • Developed Archtypes
  • Representation of our collective unconscious
  • Can be a picture such as a magic circle (Called
    a Mandala in Eastern religions)
  • Symbolizes the unity of life and the Totality of
    the self.

12
Epigenetic Theory
  • Creator Erik Erikson
  • AKA Psychosocial Theory
  • Considered Neo-Freudian
  • Focus of Theory Ego development.
  • Main Topic Identity

13
Epigenetic Theory
  • Main Tenants
  • Emphasized our social interaction with other
    people.
  • Society and culture both shape and challenge
    people.
  • His stage covered the entire life-span (8
    stages).
  • Each stage represents a crisis that must be
    resolved.
  • Epigenetic Non-genetic causes of a phenotype.
  • Change of a phenotype without change in a
    genotype.

14
Epigenetic Theory
  • Eight stages of development
  • Unique development task confronts individuals
    with crisis that must be resolved
  • Each stage has both positive and negative poles
  • Positive resolution builds foundation for healthy
    development

15
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16
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 1 - Basic Trust vs. Mistrust
  • (0-1 ½ )
  • Developing trust is the first task of the ego.
  • It is never complete.
  • The child will let mother out of sight without
    anxiety and rage when
  • She has become an inner certainty.
  • Outer predictability.
  • Quality of maternal relationship is everything.

17
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 2 - Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
  • (1-2)
  • If denied autonomy (ability to make independent
    choices)
  • Child will resist urges to manipulate and
    discriminate.
  • Shame develops.
  • Left over doubt may become paranoia.
  • The sense of autonomy serves the preservation in
    economic and political life of a sense of
    justice.

18
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 3 - Initiative vs. Guilt
  • (2-6)
  • Initiative adds to autonomy the quality of
    (tasks for the sake of being active and on the
    move)
  • Undertaking
  • Planning
  • Attacking
  • The child feels guilt over the goals contemplated
    and the acts initiated in exuberant enjoyment of
    new loco motor and mental powers.
  • The castration complex
  • Due to the child's erotic fantasies.
  • They will get in trouble for feeling that way.

19
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 3 - Initiative vs. Guilt
  • (2-6)
  • A residual conflict over initiative may be
    expressed as
  • Hysterical denial.
  • May cause the repression of the wish or
    destruction of the ego.
  • Results in paralysis and inhibition, or
    overcompensation and showing off.
  • The Oedipal stage
  • Results in oppressive establishment of a moral
    sense
  • Sets the direction towards the possible and the
    tangible which permits dreams of early childhood
    to be attached to goals of an active adult life.

20
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 4 - Industry vs. Inferiority
  • (7-12)
  • Bringing a productive situation to completion.
  • Gradually supersedes the whims and wishes of
    play.
  • The fundamentals of technology are developed.
  • To lose the hope of such "industrious"
    association may pull the child back and cause
    them to become
  • More isolated
  • Less conscious
  • The child can become a conformist and thoughtless
    slave whom others exploit.

21
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 5 - Identity vs. Role Confusion
  • (13-21)
  • AKA Diffusion
  • The adolescent is newly concerned with how they
    appear to others.
  • Ego identity
  • Accrued confidence that the inner sameness and
    continuity prepared in the past are matched by
    the sameness and continuity of one's meaning for
    others.
  • Evidenced in the promise of a career.
  • The inability to settle on a school or
    occupational identity is disturbing.

22
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 6 - Intimacy vs. Isolation
  • (21-35)
  • Body and ego must be masters of organ modes.
  • This is in order to face the fear of ego loss.
  • In situations which call for self-abandon.
  • The avoidance of these experiences leads to
    isolation and self-absorption.
  • The counterpart of intimacy is distantiation
  • Readiness to isolate and destroy forces and
    people whose essence seems dangerous to one's
    own.
  • Now true genitality can fully develop.
  • Danger
  • Isolation which can lead to severe character
    problems.

23
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 7 - Generativity vs. Stagnation
  • (35-60)
  • Generativity is the concern in establishing and
    guiding the next generation.
  • Simply having or wanting children doesn't achieve
    generativity.
  • Socially-valued work and disciples are also
    expressions of generativity.

24
Epigenetic Theory
  • Stage 8 - Ego Integrity vs. Despair
  • (60)
  • Ego integrity is the ego's accumulated assurance
    of its capacity for order and meaning.
  • Despair is signified by a fear of one's own
    death, as well as the loss of self-sufficiency,
    and of loved partners and friends.
  • Healthy children won't fear life if their elders
    have integrity enough not to fear death.
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